Robert Burns, digital whistle-blowing, and Scottish independence

By Robert Crawford

On 25 January (Burns Night) Scots, friends of Scotland and lovers of poetry all round the world will toast the “immortal memory” of Scotland’s national bard, Robert Burns. Then, as many did on New Year’s eve, they will join in singing his most famous song, “Auld Lang Syne”. This year, though, something’s different.

For the first time since 1707 (more than half a century before Burns was born), the population of Scotland is being given the chance to vote in a referendum that asks the question, “Should Scotland be an independent country?” The referendum won’t be held until 18 September, but already people are arguing about which side Robert Burns would have been on. To secure his posthumous vote would be the ultimate celebrity endorsement. Several Scottish lords have argued that the poet who hymned “The man of independent mind” would have voted against his country becoming independent.

Robert Burns By William Hole R.S.A. (The Poetry of Burns, Centenary Edition), Public domain via Wikimedia Commons.This seems unlikely. Burns was a huge fan of William Wallace, the medieval Scottish freedomfighter best known today as the hero of Braveheart, but celebrated in poetry and song in Scotland for many centuries. “Scots, wha hae wi Wallace bled, / Scots wham Bruce has aften led,” begins Burns’s celebration of the 1314 Battle of Bannockburn, where the Scots defeated a much larger English army, and so maintained their independence. Things changed with the political Union between Scotland and England in 1707, but another famous Burns song presents the Scots who voted for Union as “a parcel of rogues in a nation.”

I’m certain that the weight of evidence suggests that Burns (who had no vote in his lifetime) would have voted “Yes” to Scottish independence today. Though Unionist politicians in the British Parliament at Westminster such as Lord Forsyth and Ms Eleanor Laing, an English Conservative MP, like to quote Burns’s song “The Dumfries Volunteers,” with its lines “Be Britain still to Britain true, / Amang oursels united,” that poem was written while Burns was under suspicion because of his political radicalism and feared for his job as an Exciseman – a British civil servant. Excisemen were meant to toe the line. They were definitely not meant to write, as Burns did in his April 1790 letter to Frances Dunlop, “Alas! Have I often said to myself, what are all the boasted advantages which my Country reaps from a certain Union, that can counterbalance the annihilation of her Independence…”

Certainly you can find protestations of loyalty to the British constitution in Burns’s letters, especially in letters to people in authority. He was obliged to say this sort of thing. To understand why, try a thought experiment: imagine that Burns was alive today, was working for a very well known internet company — for fear of litigation, let’s not mention any names. Now imagine Burns had said lots of nice things about that company he worked for; but then a scholarly whistle-blower discovered among Burns’s emails nasty remarks about his employer, and it transpired that Burns had even published work praising his employer’s most celebrated rival. Would you then conclude that all those nice things Burns had said about his employer represented his true beliefs?

It’s no accident that “The Dumfries Volunteers” is a little regarded poem, whereas Burns’s poems favouring Scottish independence including “Scots, wha hae” and “Such a Parcel of Rogues in a Nation” are regarded as among his greatest political songs. Still invoked by today’s politicians such as Scotland’s pro-independence First Minister Alex Salmond in the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh, Burns’s views are much closer to an array of twenty-first-century Scottish writers than they are to those of British Prime Minister David Cameron.

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Robert Burns would definitely vote for a free Scotland. His words scream louder now beyond the grave. He wore the “buff and blue,” the Whig Party’s colours. “Scots Wha Hae” as many of his other songs for freedom were published anonymously for fear of treason and death. In “Ode to General Washington’s Birthday,” Burns spoke of Scotland’s own Freedom “The bards that erst have struck the patriot lyre, And roused the freeborn Briton’s soul of fire, No more thy England own!”

Some Scholars say Robert Burns was not a nationalist. To them, I say, read his verse again then rethink that idea. He was a Scot who believed a country should be self-governed. ¬

In search of “The Whistle’s” theme, I hadn’t left this site within five seconds only to find the definitive, “Yes,” Robert Burns was a nationalist. Robert wrote of Scotland, before English rule, “Or sang a song at least.” He was vehement against English rule.